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European Bee-eater - BirdForum Opus

Revision as of 23:38, 15 April 2007 by BirdDB (talk | contribs)
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Merops apiaster
Photo by Momo

Description

Location: Penthaz, VD, Switzerland

Identification

European Bee-eater Merops apiaster RANGE Fairly common summer visitor to Europe and western Asia. Breeds over much of Iberia, in southern France and parts of Italy, and from the eastern Adriatic to the Black and Caspian Seas. In Russia breeds north to about 570N. Found throughout Turkey and the Caucasus, in northern Iraq and in scattered parts of the Middle East. In the Mediterranean breeds on the Balearics, Corsica and Sardinia, Crete and Cyprus. In North Africa breeds widely across the north-west. Further east breeds over much of Iraq and Iran and discontinuously east to western China. Also breeds in parts of southern Africa.

  Leaves breeding grounds in August-September to winter in sub-Saharan Africa from Sierra Leone to Ivory Coast and more commonly from Tanzania to eastern South Africa.. Returns to breeding grounds in April-May. Occurs on passage throughout southern Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, regular in small numbers on the Canary Islands. 
  Frequently overshoots on spring migration and rare but annual visitor north to Britain, the North Sea countries and Scandinavia. Has bred in Britain, Scandinavia, Poland, Sicily and the Canary Islands and the first breeding for Switzerland was recorded in 1991. Vagrants recorded on Azores, Madeira and Cape Verde Islands. 
 A rare spring migrant in Britain with under 40 records in most years, the majority in southern England but also recorded north to Shetland. In Britain has bred in Sussex in 1955, two pairs raising seven young and one pair in Durham in 2002. In the same year breeding also took place in Belgium and the Netherlands, far north of usual range. 

HABITAT Open country with scattered trees, edges and clearings in light woodland, commonly along riverbanks and in vineyards and other cultivated areas. Nests colonially in tunnels in sand or earth banks.

Bird Song

<flashmp3>Merops apiaster (song).mp3</flashmp3>
Listen in an external program

External Links

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